dmtaylor
Lord ***** the Lazy
I did this correction factor calibration a few years ago when I first bought a refractometer (see below). I was a bit surprised when the result came out below 1.0 because everything that I had read suggested that it would most likely be ~1.04. So, I decided to continue monitoring it with almost every brew I have made since then. The average so far is 1.025, but the individual results are all over the place
I have no idea whether this is because my refractometer is rubbish, or if it is due to measurement error? So, for the now I do not rely on it for my ABV calculations, and continue to use a hydrometer. It's a shame because the refractometer is so quick and convenient to use.
I didn't pay a lot for the refractometer (I can't remember how much, but I think that it was ~£25.00), so perhaps a better quality one would be more reliable?????
You can use your cheap refractometer with good repeatability. I use a cheap one. You just need to pay close attention to pre-calibration and post calibration. With every single wort reading you take, measure plain water both before and after your wort measurement. Use the average deviation from zero from the water measurements to determine the true reading. My standard guidance for calibration is linked below.
By the way… my correction factor is definitely 0.99… so I think values less than 1 or 1.04 are possible, and probably common. The 1.04 is just an average of a few guys from Colorado or whatever. And who knows how well they calibrated their refractometers. Probably not like I do.
https://www.homebrewersassociation.org/forum/index.php?topic=28544.15